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department:Medicine. General Internal Medicine

recentyears:2

school:SOM

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14543


Linking biomedical language information and knowledge resources: GO and UMLS

Sarkar, I N; Cantor, M N; Gelman, R; Hartel, F; Lussier, Y A
Integration of various informatics terminologies will be an essential activity towards supporting the advancement of both the biomedical and clinical sciences. The GO consortium has developed an impressive collection of biomedical terms specific to genes and proteins in a variety of organisms. The UMLS is a composite collection of various medical terminologies, pioneered by the National Library of Medicine. In the present study, we examine a variety of techniques for mapping terms from one terminology (GO) to another (UMLS), and describe their respective performances for a small, curated data set attained from the National Cancer Institute, which had precision values ranging from 30% (100% recall) to 95% (74% recall). Based on each technique's performance, we comment on how each can be used to enrich an existing terminology (UMLS) in future studies and how linking biological terminologies to UMLS differs from linking medical terminologies
PMCID:2916681
PMID: 12603048
ISSN: 2335-6936
CID: 57704

Putting data integration into practice: using biomedical terminologies to add structure to existing data sources

Cantor, Michael N; Lussier, Yves A
A major purpose of biomedical terminologies is to provide uniform concept representation, allowing for improved methods of analysis of biomedical information. While this goal is being realized in bioinformatics, with the emergence of the Gene Ontology as a standard, there is still no real standard for the representation of clinical concepts. As discoveries in biology and clinical medicine move from parallel to intersecting paths, standardized representation will become more important. A large portion of significant data, however, is mainly represented as free text, upon which conducting computer-based inferencing is nearly impossible. In order to test our hypothesis that existing biomedical terminologies, specifically the UMLS Metathesaurus and SNOMED CT, could be used as templates to implement semantic and logical relationships over free text data that is important both clinically and biologically, we chose to analyze OMIM (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man). After finding OMIM entries' conceptual equivalents in each respective terminology, we extracted the semantic relationships that were present and evaluated a subset of them for semantic, logical, and biological legitimacy. Our study reveals the possibility of putting the knowledge present in biomedical terminologies to its intended use, with potentially clinically significant consequences
PMCID:1480054
PMID: 14728147
ISSN: 1559-4076
CID: 57702

GESDOR - a generic execution model for sharing of computer-interpretable clinical practice guidelines

Wang, Dongwen; Peleg, Mor; Bu, Davis; Cantor, Michael; Landesberg, Giora; Lunenfeld, Eitan; Tu, Samson W; Kaiser, Gail E; Hripcsak, George; Patel, Vimla L; Shortliffe, Edward H
We developed the Guideline Execution by Semantic Decomposition of Representation (GESDOR) model to share guidelines encoded in different formats at the execution level. For this purpose, we extracted a set of generalized guideline execution tasks from the existing guideline representation models. We then created the mappings between specific guideline representation models and the set of the common guideline execution tasks. Finally, we developed a generic task-scheduling model to harmonize the existing approaches to guideline task scheduling. The evaluation has shown that the GESDOR model can be used for the effective execution of guidelines encoded in different formats, and thus realizes guideline sharing at the execution level
PMCID:1480330
PMID: 14728262
ISSN: 1559-4076
CID: 60239

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis: Incidence, age and race relationship [Meeting Abstract]

Dragovic, D; Rosenstock, JL; Wahl, SJ; Panagopoulos, G; DeVita, MV; Michelis, MF
ISI:000186219101323
ISSN: 1046-6673
CID: 2320682

A pound of flesh or just proxy? : Using twin differences to estimate the effect of birth weight on life chances

Conley, Dalton; Bennett, Neil G; Strully, Kate
Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 2003
Extent: 39 p.
ISBN: n/a
CID: 1953072

The starting gate : birth weight and life chances

Conley, Dalton; Strully, Kate W; Bennett, Neil G
Berkeley, Calif. ; London : University of California Press, 2003
Extent: 258 p. ; 23cm.
ISBN: 9780520238664
CID: 1953052

NPR All things considered, Dec. 22, 2003

Prescribing good health

Ofri, Danielle
(Website)
CID: 150914

Resistance [General Interest Article]

Ofri, Danielle
Ofri reviews Sloan-Kettering by Abba Kovner and translated by Eddie Levenston
PROQUEST:568987071
ISSN: 0048-3028
CID: 86151

Common Ground

Chapter by: Ofri, Danielle
in: The best American science writing 2003 by Sacks O; Cohen J [Eds]
New York : Ecco, 2003
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0066211638
CID: 4692

Documentation of torture and ill-treatment in Mexico: A review of medical forensic investigations, 2000 to 2002

Moreno, A; Heisler, M; Keller, A; Iacopino, V
Torture and ill-treatment are reportedly widespread in Mexico. Little is known, however, about the quality of forensic investigations and documentation of evidence of these human rights violations. To determine the integrity of the documentation and the presence, quality, and frequency of both physical and psychological evaluations, analyses were conducted on 103 medical evaluations identified in 33 cases of alleged torture and/or ill-treatment that the Mexican National Commission for Human Rights (CNDH) investigated between January 2000 and July 2002. Findings suggest that forensic medical evaluations in CNDH cases have been conducted promptly after alleged occurrences of torture and/or ill-treatment, and the results of such evaluations have often been introduced as evidence in legal investigations. Inadequate documentation in most forensic medical evaluations reinforces the need for effective training, monitoring, and accountability strategies.
SCOPUS:1542380846
ISSN: 1079-0969
CID: 651012